Version 1.1 — 26 May 2010
By Jim Dovey
Originally written for the Kobo iPad Application
- eBooks by Kobo — Bookshelf and multi-column table views, ’I’m Reading’ overlay view.
- Netflix Actors (Source code here) — Movie and actor chooser views.
- Stocks – The Finance App — Portfolio view contents.
- Rivet for iPad — Media shelves.
AQGridView is an attempt to create something similar to NSCollectionView on the iPhone. If CALayoutManager were available on the iPhone, specifically the CAConstraintLayoutManager, then this would be relatively easy to put together. However, since none of those exist, there’s a lot of work to be done.
AQGridView is based around the programming model of UITableView and its associated classes. To create this class I looked long and hard at how UITableView does what it does, and attempted to replicate it as closely as possible. This means that if you are familiar with table view programming on the iPhone or iPad, you will find AQGridView simple to pick up.
- A subclass of UIScrollView.
- Reusable grid cells, similar to UITableViewCell.
- Data source and delegate very similar to those used with UITableView.
- Immediate and batched changes to the content list (insert, remove, reorder, reload).
- Similar change animations (top, bottom, left, right, fade).
- Simple AQGridViewController provided which performs grid view setup for you, similar to UITableViewController.
- Support for custom header and footer views.
- No sections— uses NSUInteger as its index location rather than NSIndexPath.
- Data source can specify a desired minimum size for all grid cells.
- Cells are not automatically resized to fit in layout grid— this can be changed via a property.
- The delegate gets an opportunity to adjust the layout frame for each cell as it is displayed.
- The grid layout is adjusted to fit the contentSize width. You can specify left and/or right padding to reach a size which can be divided into three, five, etc. cells per row.
- A customizable ‘glow’ selection style, which places a glow around a cell’s layer (or a specified sublayer) using the shadowRadius property of CALayer. Note that this is only available in iPhone OS 3.2 or later.
- The iPhone OS 3.2 SDK is needed to build. It can however run on iPhones running OS 3.0 (iPhone/iPad universal app compatible).
Download or clone it from GitHub
This project compiles to a static library which you can include, or you can just reference the source files directly. Note that there are some resources to copy into your project for the tableview-style selection backgrounds.
AQGridView has a number of supporting internal classes. The ones you’ll interact with directly are:
- AQGridView
- AQGridViewCell
- AQGridViewController
Create a subclass of AQGridViewController. In -viewDidLoad
you can change any properties you desire, add background, header, or footer views, and so on.
Unless you want a grid cell size of 96×128 (the default) you should implement the AQGridViewDataSource method -portraitGridCellSizeForGridView:
, from which you can return a suitable minimum size for your cells. This is used as the basis of the layout grid; the grid view will expand the width of this size until it reaches a factor of the current content size, then uses that for its layout.
Cells will be placed in the center of each layout grid rectangle. By default, the cells are not resized to fill this grid rectangle, but you can change this using the resizesCellWidthToFit
property of AQGridView. If your cell should not be positioned dead center (for example, if your cell contains an image with a shadow on one side, and the image should be centered, not the whole thing) then you can implement the AQGridViewDelegate method -gridView:adjustCellFrame:withinGridCellFrame:
to tweak the auto-centered cell frame calculated by the grid view’s layout code. For instance, the Kobo iPad App does this for its shelf view, and uses resizesCellWidthToFit
for its two-column list view.
- Section support. This will need a large amount of refactoring to support moves between sections, and will need a new way of keeping track of visible cell indices (it currently uses an NSRange).
- High-performance rendering. If cells don’t need to update their content after being drawn, each row could be composited into a single view for reduced load on the CoreAnimation renderer. This would need support in the grid view for displaying these composited rows, and would also need special support in KBGridViewCell to mark individual cells as needing dynamic updates, so they could be skipped when compositing and displayed normally on top of the composited row. KVO would be used to keep track of this. NB: This would also need special handling for the ‘glow’ selection style (or possibly the tracking cell would always be placed on screen, regardless of its dynamism requirements).
- Content adjustments. There are possibly still a couple of deeply-buried bugs in the cell movement code inside KBGridViewUpdateInfo. These are a pain to track down, and the code in that class could possibly use some cleanup. This is also something which would need to change a lot for section support (it makes heavy use of NSIndexSet right now).
- Don’t try to pile multiple animations on top of one another. i.e. don’t call -beginUpdates on a grid view whose -isAnimatingUpdates method returns YES. Bad things will happen, cells will end up in the wrong places, stacked on top of one another.
All examples are located in the Examples folder.
This is the demo which was presented at iPad Dev Camp in San Jose. It is primarily a showcase for automatic content reordering and animation, but also includes examples of the two main cell types: centered empty-space bordered cells, and filled line-separated cells.
Rotating the display will change the number of columns in the grid, with the associated animation. In addition, there are two buttons which cause items to be reordered. The top left button will shuffle the image order randomly, and the top right button will return everything to its original position.
The second button at the top right of the screen will pop up a menu which changes from the default empty-space grid style to a UITableView-like ‘filled cell’ grid style. In this version, the cells are automatically resized to fit their grid slots, and the selection style (and the cells’ behavior when selected) will match UITableView more closely.
This is a new demo which shows how to use gesture recognizers to implement a manual reordering interface similar to that used by the iPad springboard. If you tap and hold on a cell for half a second, it will pop out of the grid, whereupon you can drag it around and drop it in a new position by letting go. The rest of the cells move out of the way as you drag your chosen cell around.
Additionally, it shows how to use the left and right insets to force the grid view to create the desired number of columns. In portrait mode, we want four columns, and the default width of 768 divides by four nicely, so we leave the insets at zero. In landscape mode we want five columns, and so we inset left & right by two pixels each to reduce the grid’s layout width to 1020 pixels, which is cleanly divisible by 5. As a result, rotating to landscape mode results in five columns being visible.